Jean-Michel Frank
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Jean-Michel Frank (February 28, 1895-1941) was a french interior designer.
Jean-Michel Frank was born in Paris. From 1904, he attended the Lycée Janson de Sailly in Paris. In 1911, he began law school, but in 1915, he was cruelly hit by the double blow of the death of his two elder brothers, Oscar and Georges, on the front lines of World War I and that of his father who committed suicide. In 1919, he lost his mother who had been in an asylum for several years. From 1920 to 1925 he traveled and visited the world. In Venice he met the cosmopolitan society that gathered around Stravinsky and Diaghilev. Around 1927, Eugenia Errázuriz revealed to him the beauty of 18th Century styles and her own modern, minimalist esthetic, and he became her disciple.
He then got in contact with a Parisian decorator called Adolphe Chanaux to do his apartment in the Rue de Verneuil. In 1932, with Chanaux, he opened a shop at number 140 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. This was to be the consecration of ten years of collaboration, when he decorated for the Rockefellers and Guerlain. During the winter of 1939-40, he left France for South America and the United States. In 1941, he committed suicide in New York.
He was a distant cousin of Anne Frank, the famous diarist. Frank is best known for his works of marquetry with noble and luxury materials (vellum-sheathed walls, bleached leather, lacquer and shagreen).